The new thing for me has been my Caridina cantonensis tiger shrimp. One of my favorite online shrimp breeders had a sale and I could not resist. I just wanted to share some pictures of my new little beauties.
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Here are some of my guys.The new thing for me has been my Caridina cantonensis tiger shrimp. One of my favorite online shrimp breeders had a sale and I could not resist. I just wanted to share some pictures of my new little beauties.
I love that shrimp! I read those are more difficult to keep than neocardina- have you found that to be the case?The new thing for me has been my Caridina cantonensis tiger shrimp. One of my favorite online shrimp breeders had a sale and I could not resist. I just wanted to share some pictures of my new little beauties.
No, I haven’t found they are any more difficult. Some differences that I have noticed though is that they seem more aggressive than the neos. They will beat down any neo coming to share their piece of food and I ended up putting them in their own tank. It also seems that the berried females stay in hiding. I’ve only got 10 shrimp in a little 3 gallon but I’ll be darned trying to find the berried females. They hide under layers of leaf litter. That was how I got her picture, I had to lighten the exposure which is why the pic looks kind of washed out. She was hiding in the dark. I put most of the tiger caridinas in the brand new 3 gal aquarium when the tank was less than one week old. I held the tigers in my neocardina tank until I had the 3 gal tank ready. I used dirty filter floss, sprinkled Bacter AE on the inert substrate, added beneficial bacteria each day, added plants and decorations - some new, some from a mature tank, added a few ml of household ammonia after a few days, did a small water change and after a few days put the shrimp in. Everyone survived. No heater, temps around 67 in the tank. In less than 2 months I had 2 berried females and now I’m just waiting for the babies to become visible. I was thrilled as I seriously thought all I had were females. I use RO water and remineralize so that part hasn’t been challenging. This little 3 gal tank has no scuds thank goodness (but does have a few limpets), so that hasn’t caused problems. I don’t find them any more difficult than the neos, but I’m still rather new.I love that shrimp! I read those are more difficult to keep than neocardina- have you found that to be the case?
Why are you keeping your water temperature so low?It has been 6 weeks and I am still waiting for the babies to hatch. I’ve heard these shrimp can take 50 days to hatch. I’m sure my keeping the tank at room temp (68F) plays a role. I am anxiously awaiting.
Caridina shrimp are colder water species that prefer high 60s to low 70s as opposed to tropical fish.Why are you keeping your water temperature so low?
I'm also doing a caridina journey and I've just hit the phase where the females are spreading the pheromones. Good luck with your tank!It has been 6 weeks and I am still waiting for the babies to hatch. I’ve heard these shrimp can take 50 days to hatch. I’m sure my keeping the tank at room temp (68F) plays a role. I am anxiously awaiting.